— 246 — 



griseigularis, which is probably a slip of the pen, for the name 

 should be griseigula. 



A cT specimen from the 7. 7. had large, swollen testes: 

 Wing, tarsus, 



58, 59 mm. 23, 22 mm. cTd* ad. 



54, 56, 56 mm. 21—22 mm. 99 ad. 



56 mm. 22 mm. cT juv. 



Irides light-brown — brownish red; bill dark-greyish brown — 

 blackish; legs faint brownish yellow-pale flesh-coloured. 



Eremomela elegans elgonensis v. Someren. — Bull. Brit. 

 Orn. Club, vol. XL, 1920, p. 92. 



2 (5(5 ad. 18. 5., 6. 6. Mount Elgon. 



In the acacia-country and in the wooded districts below 

 the eastern slopes of Elgon this bird occurred very commonly. 

 Wing, tarsus, 



57, 58 mm. 17 mm. 



Irides light-brown — brownish red; bill black; legs brownish 

 yellow. 



Phylloscopus trochilus trochilvs (L.). — Rchw. III. p. 644. 

 1 C ad. 18. 4. Kiambu. 



I saw the European Willow Warbler in the forests around 

 Nairobi on several occasions. 



Wing 60 mm.; tarsus 19 ram. 



Irides dark-brown; upper mandible ^;reyish brown, lower 

 mandible yellowish brown; legs yellowish brown. 



Turdinae. 



Crateropus pleheius hypostidus Cab. & Rchw. — 

 Rchw. III. p 660. 



Crateropus jardinei hypostictus. Neumann: Journ. f. Orn., 1914, p. 549. — 

 Crateropus kirki Sharpe. Ogilvie-Grant : Trans. Zool. Soc. London, 1910, 

 part 4, vol. XIX, p. 377. 



1 (5 ad. 24. 7. Mount Elgon. 



Occurred rather sparingly on the slopes below Elgon, where 

 it frequented the bush. 



Neumann in his revision of this genus (Journ. f. Orn., 

 1904, p. 548—555) has sepaiated 7 forms belonging to plebeius 

 but later on (Orn. Monatsber., 1906, p. 7) he described a new form: 

 kikuyuensis from East Africa, and yet another from Senegal: 



